You ever think about how Alex said something undermining to Casey, immediately realised and apologises? Unlike two certain detectives that were mean to Casey and never apologised.
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@rmytears
You ever think about how Alex said something undermining to Casey, immediately realised and apologises? Unlike two certain detectives that were mean to Casey and never apologised.
Okay hear me out. Heated Rivalry⌠but itâs Bonmatellas.
Yes? No?
oh. my. fucking. god. leila????? i am not okay, i am so not fucking okay.
Hola. LeĂ "ColisiĂłn", y me gustĂł bastante, entretenida, y perdĂłn, me tomo el atrevimiento de aconsejarte, sin yo ser experta en absolutamente nada, mucho menos en esta app, simplemente deberĂas de ver por quĂŠ la historia no aparece en tendencias, porque yo la encontrĂŠ por casualidad, y mereces que mĂĄs gente la lea, deberĂa de tener mejores nĂşmeros. Nada, eso, perdĂłn, espero no molestarte. Y repito, me gusta el inicio de la historia.
Hola, guapa. No te preocupes, no es molestia. Me alegra muchĂsimo que te haya gustado el one shot. Y crĂŠeme, a mĂ tambiĂŠn se me hace sĂşper raro todo, de verdad. He publicado antes usando los mismos tags y nunca tuve ningĂşn problema, hasta ahora. Incluso intentĂŠ subirlo otra vez, pero seguĂa sin aparecer en los tags. En fin, si no estĂĄ destinado a ser, no serĂĄ entonces JAJSJJASJ
Hola, me encantĂł tu nueva historia, es fantĂĄstica, la verdad es que es una de esas cosas que lees y no quieres que acabe porque quieres continuar leyendo todo el tiempo.
TambiĂŠn decir que el concepto de la historia creo que es nuevo, quiero decir que no es algo que suela verse, porque al final hay ciertas historias con situaciones que se asemejan y luego cada aut@r pone su toque.
Pero no habĂa leĂdo nada parecido aquĂ y la verdad eso me gusta bastante.
TambiĂŠn creo que Clara es bastante real, es decir que al final a mucha gente le ocurre que tiene poco dinero, pero tiene que ir a la universidad y no sabe de dĂłnde sacar ese dinero, y creo que la comparaciĂłn con Alexia que obviamente dinero no le falta quedĂł perfecto.
Creo que tienes mucho talento y ojalĂĄ en un futuro seguir disfrutando de tu arte.
Muchas gracias por compartirlo.
Muchos abrazos para ti.
Que tengas un lindo dĂa.
Holaa, muchĂsimas gracias đŤ
En estos momentos creo que caĂ bajo los efectos del shadowban o como se escriba. Pero igual me alegra muchĂsimo que por lo menos alguien haya podido leer eso. No soy de publicar seguido, solo hago cuando de verdad me siento conforme con algo y justo ayer fue una de esas ocasiones.
Me alegra demasiado saber que te ha gustado. Me llena el corazĂłn<33
Bonito dĂa, tarde o noche. âĽď¸
COLISIĂN
Alexia Putellas/Clara (OC) | One-shot | 5,000 palabras
Advertencias: Lenguaje adulto, menciĂłn de lesiones menores, diferencia de edad (31/19)
Resumen: Un accidente de trĂĄfico. Una discusiĂłn en mitad de la calle. Un trayecto en coche que ninguna de las dos querĂa hacer. A veces las colisiones no son solo fĂsicas.
---
Alexia llevaba exactamente cuatro minutos de retraso cuando girĂł en la calle Mallorca, y esos cuatro minutos la estaban matando por dentro de una forma completamente desproporcionada. Cuatro minutos. Nada. Una nimiedad. Pero llevaba toda la maĂąana con esa sensaciĂłn de ir un paso por detrĂĄs de sĂ misma, de perseguir su propio horario sin alcanzarlo nunca, y ahora el semĂĄforo de Passeig de GrĂ cia se habĂa puesto en rojo justo cuando ella llegaba y ahĂ estaba, con los dedos tamborileando sobre el volante, observando cĂłmo el cronĂłmetro mental en su cabeza convertĂa cuatro minutos en cinco.
La reuniĂłn con los patrocinadores era a las once. Las once en punto. No las once y cinco. HabĂa salido del gimnasio con tiempo de sobra, se habĂa duchado rĂĄpido, se habĂa vestido mĂĄs rĂĄpido todavĂa âel traje azul marino que sabĂa que le quedaba bien, profesional pero no rĂgido, la camisa blanca que siempre funcionabaâ, pero entonces Gerard habĂa llamado justo cuando salĂa por la puerta para confirmar no sĂŠ quĂŠ mierda sobre el contrato de imagen y ella habĂa cometido el error de contestar. Treinta segundos que se convirtieron en tres minutos de Gerard hablando en ese tono que tenĂa de manager eficiente y ella diciendo "sĂ, sĂ, perfecto, lo hablamos luego" mientras buscaba las llaves del coche.
Y ahora: cinco minutos de retraso.
El semĂĄforo seguĂa en rojo. Un motorista se colĂł entre los coches, acelerando con ese sonido irritante de motor pequeĂąo forzado al mĂĄximo. Alexia respirĂł hondo. Vale. Cinco minutos no era el fin del mundo. LlegarĂa, sonreirĂa, estrecharĂa manos, harĂa su trabajo. Lo habĂa hecho mil veces. Esta reuniĂłn era importante pero tampoco era... joder, el semĂĄforo.
Verde.
AcelerĂł quizĂĄ un poco mĂĄs brusco de lo necesario, y el Audi respondiĂł con esa suavidad que todavĂa la hacĂa sonreĂr despuĂŠs de dos aĂąos. Le encantaba este coche. Le encantaba la sensaciĂłn de control, de potencia contenida bajo sus manos. GirĂł en Balmes, esquivĂł un autobĂşs que paraba sin avisar, y pensĂł en la ruta mĂĄs rĂĄpida. PodĂa seguir por Balmes hasta Diagonal, o cortar por... no, mejor Balmes. Menos semĂĄforos. Menos posibilidades de quedarse atrapada detrĂĄs de algĂşn taxi que decidiera parar en medio de la calle porque sĂ.
El telĂŠfono vibrĂł en el soporte. Un mensaje. No mirĂł. Los ojos en la carretera, las manos en el volante, respiraciĂłn tranquila. Iba a llegar. Todo estaba bien.
Barcelona en noviembre tenĂa esa luz extraĂąa, dorada pero frĂa, que hacĂa que todo pareciera mĂĄs nĂtido de lo normal. Los edificios del Eixample se recortaban contra un cielo increĂblemente azul, sin una sola nube, y Alexia tuvo uno de esos momentos raros en los que era consciente de lo afortunada que era. Treinta y uno aĂąos, carrera profesional sĂłlida, dinero en el banco, este coche, esta ciudad, esta vida que habĂa construido con sus propias manos. No estaba mal para una chica de Mollet.
El siguiente semĂĄforo se puso en ĂĄmbar justo cuando llegaba. Alexia acelerĂł. Lo pillaba. Amarillo no era rojo, y ella necesitaba esos segundos. El coche cruzĂł la intersecciĂłn justo cuando la luz cambiaba, y Alexia soltĂł el aire que no sabĂa que estaba conteniendo.
Cuatro minutos y medio de retraso ahora. Mejor. Casi aceptable.
PasĂł junto a una cafeterĂa que conocĂa, con las mesas en la terraza llenas de gente que aparentemente no tenĂa reuniones a las once, y sintiĂł una punzada de envidia. QuĂŠ bien debĂa ser tomarse un cafĂŠ tranquila, sin prisa, sin cronĂłmetros mentales. Pero tambiĂŠn, si era honesta, se aburrirĂa. Alexia necesitaba el movimiento, la agenda llena, la sensaciĂłn de ir hacia algo. Siempre habĂa sido asĂ.
Otro semĂĄforo. Este sĂ que lo pillĂł en verde. Perfecto. El universo se estaba poniendo de su lado. Balmes estaba sorprendentemente despejado para un martes a media maĂąana, solo el trĂĄfico normal, nada caĂłtico. Iba a llegar. Tres minutos de retraso. Absolutamente manejable. LlamarĂa desde el parking, dirĂa que subĂa en dos minutos, y nadie notarĂa nada.
El telĂŠfono vibrĂł otra vez. Gerard, probablemente. O su madre, que Ăşltimamente habĂa desarrollado esta costumbre de mandar mensajes de buenos dĂas a horas completamente aleatorias. Alexia sonriĂł. Su madre y la tecnologĂa tenĂan una relaciĂłn complicada.
Redujo la velocidad al acercarse a la siguiente intersecciĂłn. El semĂĄforo estaba en verde pero habĂa un autobĂşs parado en el carril de la derecha y la gente cruzaba sin mirar y... vale, mejor ir con cuidado. PasĂł junto al autobĂşs despacio, atenta a que nadie se lanzara a cruzar, y justo cuando aceleraba de nuevo vio el movimiento por el rabillo del ojo.
Un ciclomotor. PequeĂąo, azul descolorido, con alguien encima inclinado hacia delante como si pudiera hacer que el trasto fuera mĂĄs rĂĄpido por pura fuerza de voluntad. VenĂa de la calle lateral, rĂĄpido, demasiado rĂĄpido, y Alexia pensĂł "va a parar" y luego "deberĂa parar" y luego "no va a parar" y luego ya no hubo tiempo de pensar nada.
El impacto fue mĂĄs ruido que sensaciĂłn. Un crujido de plĂĄstico y metal que pareciĂł demasiado fuerte, demasiado real, y luego el chirrido de sus propios frenos y el coche deteniĂŠndose de golpe y el silencio sĂşbito y terrible que vino despuĂŠs.
Alexia se quedĂł paralizada durante dos segundos completos, las manos todavĂa aferradas al volante, el corazĂłn latiendo en algĂşn lugar cerca de su garganta. Luego la adrenalina la golpeĂł como una ola y estaba quitĂĄndose el cinturĂłn, abriendo la puerta, saliendo del coche sin ni siquiera pensar en aparcar bien o poner las luces de emergencia.
"Joder. Joder, joder, joder."
El ciclomotor estaba en el suelo. Eso fue lo primero que vio. En el suelo, la rueda delantera torcida en un ĂĄngulo que no era natural, el manillar girado, y a su lado...
La chica ya estaba levantĂĄndose.
Alexia sintiĂł un alivio tan intenso que casi le doliĂł. EstĂĄ viva. EstĂĄ moviĂŠndose. No la he matado. Dios, no la he matado.
"ÂżEstĂĄs bien?" Las palabras salieron atropelladas, desesperadas. "Joder, lo siento, yo... ÂżestĂĄs bien?"
La chica se girĂł hacia ella, y Alexia tuvo una impresiĂłn confusa de ojos oscuros muy abiertos, pelo castaĂąo escapando de un casco, y una expresiĂłn que pasĂł de shock a furia en menos de un segundo.
"ÂżQue si estoy BIEN?" La voz era aguda, joven, vibrando de rabia. "ÂżEn serio me estĂĄs preguntando si estoy bien?"
Clara habĂa salido de casa sabiendo que iba a llegar tarde. No era la primera vez âjoder, no era ni la dĂŠcima vezâ pero hoy era importante y ella habĂa jurado, prometido, garantizado que esta vez serĂa diferente. Esta vez pondrĂa el despertador media hora antes. Esta vez no se quedarĂa dormida despuĂŠs de apagarlo. Esta vez no tendrĂa que elegir entre desayunar o llegar a tiempo.
Spoiler: habĂa elegido mal en las tres.
AsĂ que ahĂ estaba, a las diez y cuarenta de un martes de mierda, acelerando por las calles de Barcelona en su ciclomotor que tenĂa mĂĄs aĂąos que ella y hacĂa un ruido como si estuviera pidiendo a gritos la eutanasia. La clase de TeorĂa del Derecho Constitucional empezaba a las once menos cuarto. Menos cuarto. Y ella estaba todavĂa a quince minutos de la universidad, si no pillaba todos los semĂĄforos en rojo, que por supuesto los iba a pillar porque el universo la odiaba.
El profesor MartĂnez no aceptaba retrasos. Lo habĂa dejado clarĂsimo el primer dĂa: "La puntualidad es una forma de respeto. Si no pueden llegar a tiempo, no vengan directamente". Y Clara necesitaba estar en esa clase. Necesitaba los apuntes. Necesitaba que el cabrĂłn ese la viera tomando notas y prestando atenciĂłn porque habĂa suspendido el primer parcial y si suspendĂa el segundo estaba jodida, y no podĂa estar jodida porque esta carrera le estaba costando cada puto euro que no tenĂa y...
El semĂĄforo delante se puso en ĂĄmbar.
Clara acelerĂł.
El ciclomotor protestĂł con un gemido mecĂĄnico que sonaba vagamente obsceno, pero obedeciĂł. Buena chica. Vamos. Solo un poco mĂĄs. Podemos hacerlo.
Su mochila rebotaba contra su espalda con cada bache, llena de libros que pesaban como si fueran ladrillos. Derecho Civil, Derecho Penal, Constitucional... Âżpor quĂŠ los libros de derecho tenĂan que ser tan jodidamente grandes? ÂżNo podĂan resumir un poco? ÂżHacer un "Lo esencial del CĂłdigo Civil para estudiantes pobres que van en ciclomotor"?
GirĂł en Balmes sin reducir la velocidad, inclinĂĄndose en la curva, y sintiĂł ese pequeĂąo subidĂłn de adrenalina que siempre le daba conducir este trasto. Vale, era viejo. Vale, hacĂa ruido. Vale, probablemente era un peligro pĂşblico. Pero era suyo, lo habĂa comprado con su propio dinero del trabajo de verano en la cafeterĂa, y la llevaba donde necesitaba ir.
Bueno. La llevaba tarde a donde necesitaba ir. Pero la llevaba.
El mĂłvil vibrĂł en su bolsillo. Probablemente Martina preguntando dĂłnde coĂąo estaba. Clara la ignorĂł. Ya lo mirarĂa cuando llegara. Si llegaba. Joder, tenĂa que llegar.
El trĂĄfico estaba bastante bien, considerando. Algunos coches, un par de autobuses, nada terrible. Clara se colĂł entre los carriles, aprovechando que el ciclomotor era estrecho, acelerando cada vez que habĂa un hueco. El viento le daba en la cara por debajo del casco y tenĂa frĂo pero no importaba. Diez minutos para llegar. PodĂa hacerlo. TenĂa que hacerlo.
Vio el Audi negro en el Ăşltimo segundo.
Lo vio y pensĂł "tengo paso" y "va a parar" y luego "mierda" y luego no pensĂł nada porque el mundo se convirtiĂł en ruido y movimiento y su cuerpo chocando contra algo duro y el asfalto viniendo hacia ella demasiado rĂĄpido y...
Impacto.
Clara rodĂł. El instinto la hizo encogerse, proteger la cabeza, y aterrizĂł mal sobre el hombro izquierdo con un dolor que le atravesĂł todo el brazo como electricidad. El casco golpeĂł el suelo con un ruido sordo que sintiĂł mĂĄs que oyĂł, y luego estaba quieta, tumbada en medio de la calle, mirando el cielo increĂblemente azul y pensando de forma muy distante: "Esto no tendrĂa que haber pasado".
Ruido de puertas de coche. Pasos corriendo. Voces.
Clara parpadeĂł. RespirĂł. Todo dolĂa pero nada parecĂa roto. MoviĂł los dedos. Bien. Las piernas. Bien. El hombro...
Ay, mierda. El hombro no estaba bien.
Pero estaba viva. Estaba consciente. Estaba... joder, estaba tirada en medio de la calle como una idiota.
Se incorporĂł, ignorando el dolor que le recorriĂł todo el lado izquierdo del cuerpo. El casco. TenĂa que quitarse el casco. Se lo arrancĂł con la mano derecha porque la izquierda no querĂa cooperar y respirĂł aire fresco y entonces la vio.
La mujer del Audi. De pie junto a su coche, las manos en la cabeza, la cara pĂĄlida de horror.
Y algo dentro de Clara, algo que habĂa estado contenido durante el impacto y la caĂda, explotĂł.
"ÂżQue si estoy BIEN?" La voz le saliĂł demasiado aguda, vibrante de furia y miedo y dolor. "ÂżEn serio me estĂĄs preguntando si estoy bien?"
Se levantĂł completamente, tambaleĂĄndose un poco, y el hombro protestĂł pero lo ignorĂł. Su ciclomotor. Donde estaba su...
AhĂ. En el suelo. La rueda delantera destrozada. El guardabarros arrancado. El manillar torcido.
"Mi moto." Clara dio un paso hacia el ciclomotor, luego hacia la mujer. "Has destrozado mi puta moto."
"TĂş..." La mujer parecĂa estar intentando recuperar el habla. Era mayor. Treinta y muchos, quizĂĄ. Guapa de esa forma pulida que tenĂa la gente con dinero. Traje caro. Coche caro. Probablemente no tenĂa ni idea de lo que costaba un puto ciclomotor de segunda mano. "TĂş te has saltado el semĂĄforo."
"ÂżQUĂ?" Clara sintiĂł que la furia subĂa otro nivel. "Yo tenĂa paso. TĂ te has saltado..."
"El semĂĄforo estaba en rojo..."
"ÂĄEstaba en VERDE!"
"ÂĄPara MĂ estaba en verde!"
Estaban gritĂĄndose en medio de la calle. La gente se habĂa parado a mirar. Un taxi pitĂł al pasar. Clara era vagamente consciente de todo esto pero no le importaba. Lo Ăşnico que importaba era que su ciclomotor âsu forma de llegar a clase, al trabajo, a cualquier puto sitioâ estaba destrozado en el suelo y esta mujer con su coche de mierda y su traje de mierda estaba intentando decir que era culpa suya.
"Sabes quĂŠ..." Clara dio un paso hacia ella, seĂąalĂĄndola con el dedo. "Gente como tĂş, que va en coche, que no mira, que..."
"ÂżGente como yo?" La mujer parecĂa ofendida ahora. "Yo iba conduciendo normal, tĂş eres la que..."
"ÂĄNormal! ÂĄSĂ, claro, normalĂsimo atropellar a la gente!"
"ÂĄNo te he atropellado! ÂĄHe golpeado tu moto!"
"ÂĄCON-MI-GO-EN-CI-MA!"
Clara gesticulĂł violentamente con ambos brazos para enfatizar su punto, y el dolor que le atravesĂł el hombro izquierdo fue tan intenso, tan inesperado, que el mundo se volviĂł blanco durante un segundo. Se tambaleĂł, la mano derecha volando instintivamente al hombro, y un sonido saliĂł de su garganta que definitivamente no era un grito pero tampoco era nada que quisiera que nadie oyera.
"ÂĄJoder!" La mujer estaba a su lado en un segundo, las manos extendidas. "ÂżEstĂĄs herida? DĂŠjame ver..."
"No me toques." Clara se apartĂł, a pesar de que el movimiento hizo que el hombro protestara de nuevo. "Estoy bien."
"Claramente no estĂĄs bien. Necesitas un mĂŠdico."
"Lo que necesito es llegar a clase."
La mujer la mirĂł como si estuviera loca. "ÂżClase? ÂżAcabas de tener un accidente y estĂĄs pensando en clase?"
"SĂ." Clara apretĂł los dientes. El dolor estaba empezando a extenderse, un latido constante que bajaba por todo su brazo. "SĂ, estoy pensando en clase. Llego tarde a clase. Por tu culpa."
"Te llevo al hospital."
"No."
"No es una sugerencia." La mujer tenĂa esa voz ahora, esa voz de adulto que estĂĄ acostumbrado a que la gente le haga caso. "Has tenido un accidente. PodrĂas tener una conmociĂłn, o..."
"Tengo un examen." Clara sabĂa que sonaba ridĂculo. PodĂa ver en la cara de la mujer que sonaba ridĂculo. Pero era la verdad. "Tengo un examen y si no voy suspendo y si suspendo pierdo la beca y si pierdo la beca tengo que dejar la universidad, asĂ que no, no voy al puto hospital, voy a clase."
Silencio. La mujer la miraba con una expresiĂłn que Clara no sabĂa interpretar. Luego suspirĂł, pasĂĄndose una mano por el pelo.
"Vale." Su voz era mĂĄs suave ahora. "Vale. Pero despuĂŠs de clase vas al mĂŠdico."
"SĂ, claro, lo que tĂş digas."
"Lo digo en serio."
"Y yo tambiĂŠn." Clara mirĂł su ciclomotor. Destrozado. Completamente destrozado. "Joder. Mierda. ÂżCĂłmo coĂąo voy a llegar ahora?"
La mujer siguiĂł su mirada. Luego mirĂł su reloj. Luego mirĂł a Clara.
"Te llevo."
"ÂżQuĂŠ?"
"A tu universidad. Te llevo." Ya estaba sacando el mĂłvil. "ÂżDĂłnde estudias?"
"No necesito que me..."
"ÂżDĂłnde?"
Clara apretĂł la mandĂbula. El hombro le dolĂa. LlegarĂa sĂşper tarde. Y esta mujer, esta mujer que acababa de destrozar su Ăşnico medio de transporte, estaba ofreciendo llevarla y Clara la odiaba por ello pero tambiĂŠn...
"Universidad Pompeu Fabra." Las palabras salieron a regaĂąadientes. "Campus Ciutadella."
La mujer asintiĂł, ya marcando algo en el telĂŠfono. "Vale. Vamos a meter tu moto en mi coche y..."
"Ciclomotor."
"ÂżQuĂŠ?"
"No es una moto. Es un ciclomotor." Clara no sabĂa por quĂŠ esto le parecĂa importante pero lo era. "Y no va a caber en tu coche."
"Tengo un Audi Q5. CabrĂĄ."
Por supuesto que tenĂa un Audi Q5. Clara observĂł cĂłmo la mujer se acercaba al ciclomotor, evaluĂĄndolo con esa expresiĂłn concentrada de alguien que estĂĄ acostumbrado a resolver problemas. TenĂa que admitir, muy a su pesar, que habĂa algo... no, ni lo pienses. Esta mujer acababa de atropellarla. Bueno, golpear su ciclomotor. Con ella encima. Lo que fuera.
"Dame tu nĂşmero."
La mujer se girĂł, sorprendida. "ÂżQuĂŠ?"
"Tu nĂşmero de telĂŠfono." Clara sacĂł su mĂłvil del bolsillo con la mano derecha, intentando no hacer gestos raros con la izquierda. "Para enviarte la factura de la reparaciĂłn."
La mujer dudĂł un segundo, luego asintiĂł. "Vale. SĂ. Por supuesto." DictĂł el nĂşmero, observando cĂłmo Clara lo tecleaba torpemente con una mano. "Y el tuyo. Necesito el tuyo tambiĂŠn."
"ÂżPara quĂŠ?"
"Para saber si has ido al mĂŠdico despuĂŠs de clase."
"No soy tu..."
"Dame tu nĂşmero o no te llevo a ningĂşn sitio."
Clara la fulminĂł con la mirada, pero dictĂł su nĂşmero. Esta mujer era insufrible. Absolutamente insufrible.
Y ahora iba a tener que pasar quince minutos encerrada en un coche con ella.
Perfecto. El dĂa seguĂa mejorando.
Meter el ciclomotor en el maletero del Audi fue un ejercicio de paciencia que Alexia no tenĂa. La rueda delantera estaba jodida âhabĂa que reconocer que sĂ, habĂa que reconocer que ella habĂa jodido esa ruedaâ y el manillar no ayudaba, y la chica estaba allĂ de pie, claramente con dolor, intentando ayudar con una sola mano y poniendo todo peor.
"Para. Para." Alexia alzĂł una mano. "SiĂŠntate en el coche. Yo me encargo."
"Puedo ayudar."
"Con un hombro jodido. SĂ. SĂşper Ăştil." Alexia no supo de dĂłnde saliĂł el sarcasmo. Estaba estresada. HabĂa atropellado a alguien. Bueno, golpeado su moto. Ciclomotor. Lo que fuera. Y ahora llegaba tardĂsimo a su reuniĂłn y...
La reuniĂłn. Mierda.
SacĂł el mĂłvil mientras manipulaba el ciclomotor hacia el maletero. Un mensaje a Gerard: "Retraso. Problema. Llego en 20 min". No era mentira. TĂŠcnicamente era un problema. Un problema en forma de universitaria cabreada con el hombro lesionado y una actitud que podrĂa cortar cristal.
El ciclomotor finalmente entrĂł, a medias, con la parte trasera sobresaliendo un poco, pero entrĂł. Alexia cerrĂł el maletero lo mejor que pudo y se limpiĂł las manos en los pantalones. Genial. El traje caro ahora tenĂa manchas de grasa. Perfecto. El dĂa iba de maravilla.
RodeĂł el coche y se metiĂł en el asiento del conductor. La chica ya estaba dentro, abrochĂĄndose el cinturĂłn torpemente con una mano, el rostro pĂĄlido pero la mandĂbula tensa. Testaruda. IncreĂblemente testaruda.
"ÂżCĂłmo te llamas?" Alexia arrancĂł el motor, comprobando los espejos.
"ÂżPor quĂŠ?"
"Porque acabo de atropellarte y me gustarĂa saber tu nombre." Otra vez el sarcasmo. Genial, Alexia. Muy maduro.
"Clara." La chica âClaraâ la mirĂł de reojo. "ÂżY tĂş?"
"Alexia."
"Vale, Alexia." Clara se acomodĂł en el asiento, claramente tratando de no mover el hombro. "Conduce rĂĄpido, por favor. Ya voy sĂşper tarde."
Alexia saliĂł del espacio donde habĂa quedado medio aparcada, medio parada en mitad de la calle. Un par de coches pitaron. Ella los ignorĂł. El trĂĄfico era denso pero manejable. Con suerte, llegarĂa a la chica a su universidad en quince minutos y luego podrĂa ir a su reuniĂłn y...
No. No podĂa ir a la reuniĂłn. No asĂ. TendrĂa que cancelar. Joder.
Otro mensaje a Gerard mientras esperaba en un semĂĄforo: "Cancela reuniĂłn. Reagenda. Emergencia". Su manager iba a matarla.
"ÂżEn serio vas a usar el mĂłvil mientras conduces?" La voz de Clara era afilada. "ÂżNo acabas de atropellar a alguien?"
"El coche estĂĄ parado."
"Pero..."
"Y no te he atropellado. He golpeado tu ciclomotor."
"Con. Migo. Encima."
Alexia suspirĂł. Esto iba a ser un trayecto largo. Muy largo.
El semĂĄforo cambiĂł a verde. Alexia acelerĂł, tomando la ruta que su GPS le indicaba hacia la Pompeu Fabra. Catorce minutos. PodĂa hacerlo.
"DeberĂas ir al hospital." Lo dijo sin mirar a Clara, manteniendo los ojos en el trĂĄfico.
"Ya hemos tenido esta conversaciĂłn."
"Tu hombro..."
"EstĂĄ bien."
"Claramente no estĂĄ bien. Te he visto casi desmayarte antes."
"No me he desmayado."
"Casi."
"Casi no cuenta." Clara se moviĂł en el asiento y Alexia la vio hacer una mueca de dolor. "Mira, no tengo tiempo para ir al hospital, Âżvale? Tengo clase. Tengo un examen. Y despuĂŠs del examen, si quieres, irĂŠ al puto hospital y te mandarĂŠ la factura junto con la de la reparaciĂłn del ciclomotor. ÂżContenta?"
Alexia apretĂł el volante. No estaba contenta. Para nada. Esta chica necesitaba atenciĂłn mĂŠdica y era demasiado testaruda para admitirlo.
"ÂżCuĂĄntos aĂąos tienes?" No sabĂa por quĂŠ preguntaba. Bueno, sĂ sabĂa. Clara parecĂa joven. Muy joven. Y Alexia estaba empezando a sentirse como una irresponsable por llevarla a clase en lugar de a urgencias.
"Diecinueve. ÂżPor?"
Diecinueve. Joder. Doce aĂąos menor que ella. Alexia habĂa estado jugando profesionalmente cuando esta chica tenĂa siete aĂąos.
"Por nada."
"ÂżY tĂş?"
"Treinta y uno."
Clara la mirĂł de reojo, como evaluĂĄndola. "Te ves mayor."
Alexia casi se rĂe. Casi. "Gracias."
"No es un insulto. Solo... pareces adulta."
"Soy adulta."
"Ya, bueno." Clara volviĂł a mirar por la ventana. "Algunas personas tienen treinta y pico y todavĂa parecen crĂos."
HabĂa algo en su tono, algo amargo, que hizo que Alexia la mirara mĂĄs de cerca. Clara estaba pĂĄlida, con ojeras marcadas bajo los ojos. El pelo castaĂąo desordenado. La ropa âvaqueros y una sudadera de la universidadâ prĂĄctica pero desgastada. El ciclomotor viejo. El pĂĄnico por llegar a clase. La menciĂłn de una beca.
Alexia podĂa leer entre lĂneas. Esta chica no tenĂa dinero. Y Alexia acababa de destrozar su Ăşnica forma de transporte.
La culpa se asentĂł en su estĂłmago como plomo.
"Lo siento." Las palabras salieron mĂĄs suaves de lo que pretendĂa. "De verdad. Por tu ciclomotor. Por... todo."
Clara no dijo nada durante un momento. Luego, en voz baja: "No era tu culpa. Bueno. No del todo. Yo tambiĂŠn iba rĂĄpido."
Era probablemente lo mĂĄs cerca de una disculpa que iba a recibir.
"Aun asĂ." Alexia tomĂł un giro. "PagarĂŠ la reparaciĂłn. Completamente."
"Obviamente." Pero habĂa menos filo en su voz ahora. "Y si no se puede reparar, uno nuevo."
"ÂżNuevo? Ese trasto tenĂa que tener veinte aĂąos."
"Dieciocho. Y era mi trasto." Clara la mirĂł, defensiva. "No todos podemos permitirnos un Audi Q5, Âżsabes?"
Y ahĂ estaba de nuevo, la tensiĂłn, el resentimiento. Alexia suspirĂł.
"No he dicho..."
"No hace falta que digas nada." Clara se cruzĂł de brazos, luego hizo una mueca y dejĂł caer el izquierdo. "Se nota. El coche caro. El traje caro. Probablemente tienes un trabajo increĂble y un piso enorme y nunca has tenido que preguntarte cĂłmo vas a pagar el alquiler."
Alexia sintiĂł que la irritaciĂłn crecĂa. "No sabes nada de mĂ."
"ÂżY tĂş de mĂ?" Clara se girĂł en el asiento para mirarla de frente, ignorando el dolor que eso claramente le causaba. "Vienes aquĂ, con tu coche de mierda, me atropellas, y ahora me das lecciones sobre ir al hospital como si tuvieras algĂşn derecho..."
"ÂĄEstoy preocupada!"
"ÂĄPues no lo estĂŠs!"
Estaban gritando otra vez. En el espacio cerrado del coche, sonaba incluso peor que en la calle. Alexia respirĂł hondo, intentando calmarse. Esto era ridĂculo. Completamente ridĂculo.
"Mira." Mantuvo la voz firme. "Entiendo que estĂŠs cabreada. Tienes derecho a estarlo. Pero estĂĄs herida y..."
"Y ya te he dicho que irĂŠ al mĂŠdico despuĂŠs de clase."
"ÂżLo prometes?"
"ÂżQuĂŠ eres, mi madre?"
"ÂĄAlguien tiene que preocuparse porque claramente tĂş no lo haces!"
Silencio. Clara la miraba con los ojos muy abiertos, como si Alexia hubiera dicho algo completamente inesperado. Luego desviĂł la vista, mordiĂŠndose el labio.
"No es que no me preocupe." Su voz era mĂĄs baja ahora. "Es que no tengo tiempo para preocuparme."
Y eso, eso golpeĂł a Alexia de una forma que no esperaba. Porque lo entendĂa. Dios, lo entendĂa. HabĂa pasado aĂąos asĂ, aĂąos en los que cada minuto contaba, en los que no podĂa permitirse una lesiĂłn o una enfermedad porque todo el andamiaje de su vida dependĂa de seguir adelante.
Pero eso no hacĂa que fuera correcto. Y definitivamente no hacĂa que fuera seguro.
"ÂżQuĂŠ estudias?" CambiĂł de tema deliberadamente, buscando terreno menos peligroso.
Clara la mirĂł de reojo, sospechosa. "Derecho."
"ÂżPrimer aĂąo?"
"Segundo."
"ÂżTe gusta?"
"ÂżPor quĂŠ lo preguntas?"
Alexia se encogiĂł de hombros, tanto como podĂa mientras conducĂa. "Curiosidad."
"La gente no suele tener curiosidad sobre mis estudios despuĂŠs de atropellarme."
"Yo no..."
"Ya lo sĂŠ, ya lo sĂŠ. Has golpeado mi ciclomotor. Con-migo-encima." Pero habĂa un atisbo de sonrisa en su voz ahora. PequeĂąo. Apenas ahĂ. Pero ahĂ.
Alexia sintiĂł que algo en su pecho se aflojaba un poco.
"Entonces, Âżte gusta?"
Clara suspirĂł. "SĂ. Y no. Es... complicado. Hay partes que me encantan y partes que quiero quemar junto con los libros de texto. Pero sĂ. En general, sĂ."
"ÂżQuĂŠ quieres hacer despuĂŠs? ÂżAbogada?"
"No lo sĂŠ. QuizĂĄ. O jueza. O tirarme de un puente despuĂŠs de Derecho Mercantil." Hizo una pausa. "Probablemente lo tercero."
Alexia se riĂł. No pudo evitarlo. Y Clara la mirĂł sorprendida, luego sonriĂł tambiĂŠn. Una sonrisa real esta vez, que le iluminĂł toda la cara.
Joder.
Alexia apartĂł la vista, concentrĂĄndose en el trĂĄfico. No. Absolutamente no. Esta chica tenĂa diecinueve aĂąos. Acababa de atropellarla. Golpear su ciclomotor. Lo que fuera. El punto era: no.
Pero habĂa algo en la forma en que Clara sonreĂa, en la forma en que su humor ĂĄcido se filtraba incluso a travĂŠs del dolor y la rabia, que hacĂa que Alexia quisiera seguir haciĂŠndola sonreĂr.
Lo cual era un problema.
"ÂżY tĂş?" Clara habĂa vuelto a mirar por la ventana, el perfil de su cara suave contra la luz. "ÂżA quĂŠ te dedicas?"
Alexia dudĂł. La mayorĂa de la gente la conocĂa. ReconocĂa su nombre, su cara. Pero Clara no habĂa dado ninguna seĂąal de reconocimiento, y parte de Alexia âuna parte pequeĂąa y probablemente patĂŠticaâ querĂa mantenerlo asĂ un poco mĂĄs.
"Marketing deportivo." No era del todo mentira. Los contratos publicitarios, las reuniones con patrocinadores, todo eso era parte de su vida ahora.
"Suena aburrido."
Alexia se riĂł otra vez. "A veces lo es."
"ÂżY otras veces?"
"Otras veces es..." ÂżQuĂŠ? ÂżIncreĂble? ÂżAgotador? ÂżTodo lo que siempre quiso? "Interesante."
"QuĂŠ descripciĂłn tan apasionada." Clara la mirĂł de reojo. "Se nota que te encanta."
"Es complicado."
"Todo parece complicado hoy."
"QuizĂĄ porque hoy ha sido complicado."
"Culpa tuya."
"Culpa de las dos."
Clara hizo un sonido que podrĂa haber sido una risa o una protesta o ambas. Luego se quedĂł callada, mirando por la ventana mientras Barcelona pasaba a su alrededor. Edificios, gente, vida. El mundo siguiendo como si no hubiera pasado nada, como si no acabaran de chocar en medio de una intersecciĂłn y ahora estuvieran compartiendo este espacio pequeĂąo e incĂłmodo.
"Duele mĂĄs ahora." Clara lo dijo en voz baja, casi para sĂ misma.
Alexia la mirĂł. "ÂżEl hombro?"
"SĂ."
"Eso significa que deberĂas..."
"Ya lo sĂŠ." Clara cerrĂł los ojos. "Ya lo sĂŠ. Pero no puedo. ÂżVale? Simplemente no puedo."
Y habĂa algo en su voz, algo quebrado bajo la obstinaciĂłn, que hizo que Alexia quisiera parar el coche y... ÂżquĂŠ? ÂżAbrazarla? ÂżObligarla a ir al hospital? ÂżArreglar esto de alguna forma?
Pero no podĂa arreglarlo. Solo podĂa llevarla a su universidad y esperar que tuviera el sentido comĂşn de ir al mĂŠdico despuĂŠs.
El GPS indicaba cinco minutos. Estaban cerca.
"Te voy a dar dinero." Alexia lo dijo antes de pensarlo. "Para un taxi. Al hospital. DespuĂŠs de tu clase."
"No necesito tu dinero."
"Clara..."
"En serio. Puedo... cogerĂŠ el metro o lo que sea."
"Con un hombro lesionado. Claro. Buena idea."
"ÂżPor quĂŠ te importa tanto?" Clara se girĂł hacia ella, y habĂa algo en sus ojos, algo vulnerable bajo la irritaciĂłn. "Ni siquiera me conoces."
"Porque te he hecho daĂąo." Era la verdad. La simple y terrible verdad. "Y sĂŠ que no fue solo culpa mĂa, y sĂŠ que tĂş tambiĂŠn ibas rĂĄpido, pero te he hecho daĂąo y eso... eso me importa."
Silencio. Clara la miraba como si estuviera intentando resolver un puzzle.
"Eres rara." Lo dijo finalmente.
Alexia casi se riĂł. "TĂş tampoco eres exactamente normal."
"Normal es aburrido."
"En eso estamos de acuerdo."
El GPS anunciĂł que habĂan llegado. Alexia vio los edificios de la Pompeu Fabra delante, estudiantes caminando por todas partes, y una parte de ella âuna parte que definitivamente no deberĂa estar ahĂâ no querĂa que esto terminara.
Lo cual era ridĂculo. Esto no era un encuentro. Era las consecuencias de un accidente de trĂĄfico. Clara iba a bajarse del coche, ir a su clase, e idealmente despuĂŠs ir al hospital, y Alexia probablemente nunca volverĂa a verla.
Excepto que tenĂa su nĂşmero. Y Clara tenĂa el suyo.
Alexia aparcĂł en la zona de carga y descarga, poniendo las luces de emergencia. Clara ya estaba desabrochĂĄndose el cinturĂłn, moviĂŠndose rĂgida y cuidadosa.
"ÂżQuieres que te ayude a bajar?" Alexia sabĂa que la respuesta serĂa no antes de que las palabras salieran de su boca.
"Puedo sola."
Por supuesto que podĂa.
Clara abriĂł la puerta, saliĂł, se quedĂł de pie un momento como orientĂĄndose. Luego se inclinĂł para mirar a Alexia a travĂŠs de la puerta abierta.
"Gracias. Por traerme." No sonaba especialmente agradecida, pero lo dijo de todos modos.
"De nada." Alexia dudĂł. "ÂżMe llamarĂĄs? ÂżDespuĂŠs del mĂŠdico?"
"Tengo tu nĂşmero para mandarte la factura, no para informes mĂŠdicos."
"Clara..."
"Vale, vale." Puso los ojos en blanco. "Si voy al mĂŠdico, te mando un mensaje."
"Cuando vayas al mĂŠdico."
"Como sea." Clara empezĂł a cerrar la puerta, luego se detuvo. "Alexia."
"ÂżSĂ?"
"Conduce con mĂĄs cuidado."
Y entonces cerrĂł la puerta y se fue, caminando con esa forma rĂgida que decĂa que le dolĂa pero que nunca lo admitirĂa, la mochila colgando de un solo hombro, desapareciendo entre la multitud de estudiantes.
Alexia se quedĂł sentada en el coche, observĂĄndola hasta que no pudo distinguirla mĂĄs. Luego mirĂł el reloj. Once y veinte. HabĂa perdido completamente la reuniĂłn. Gerard probablemente la estaba buscando con un hacha.
DeberĂa irse. TenĂa mil cosas que hacer. Llamadas que hacer. Disculpas que ofrecer.
Pero se quedĂł ahĂ sentada un momento mĂĄs, mirando el edificio donde Clara habĂa desaparecido, con el ciclomotor destrozado todavĂa en su maletero y el nĂşmero de una chica de diecinueve aĂąos guardado en su mĂłvil.
Su telĂŠfono vibrĂł. Un mensaje de Clara: "He llegado. Respira".
Alexia sonriĂł a pesar de sĂ misma. Luego escribiĂł: "Ve al mĂŠdico despuĂŠs".
La respuesta fue inmediata: "Deja de ser mi madre".
"Alguien tiene que serlo".
"Insufrible".
"Testaruda".
"Atropelladora".
"Eso ni siquiera es una palabra".
"Ahora sĂ".
Alexia se riĂł, el sonido extraĂąo en el silencio del coche. Luego, porque aparentemente habĂa perdido la cabeza completamente: "Tengo tu moto. Ciclomotor. Necesito saber dĂłnde llevarlo para reparar".
Los tres puntos aparecieron y desaparecieron varias veces. Finalmente: "Hay un taller en Poblenou. Te mando la direcciĂłn luego. Ahora tengo clase. La clase a la que lleguĂŠ tarde. Por tu culpa".
"Culpa de las dos".
"Como sea. AdiĂłs, Alexia".
"AdiĂłs, Clara. Ve al mĂŠdico".
No hubo respuesta. Alexia guardĂł el telĂŠfono, arrancĂł el motor, y se incorporĂł al trĂĄfico. TenĂa que ir a ver a Gerard. TenĂa que arreglar el desastre de la reuniĂłn cancelada. TenĂa que explicar... algo. Cualquier cosa que sonara remotamente creĂble.
Pero mientras conducĂa de vuelta hacia su vida normal, hacia su rutina perfectamente organizada que se habĂa ido al traste en un solo segundo de distracciĂłn, todo lo que podĂa pensar era en ojos oscuros llenos de furia y dolor, en una sonrisa que habĂa aparecido a pesar de todo, en la forma en que Clara habĂa dicho su nombre.
Y en cĂłmo, por primera vez en aĂąos, Alexia no sabĂa quĂŠ iba a pasar a continuaciĂłn.
Lo cual, sorprendentemente, no le molestaba tanto como deberĂa.
Wait so are you saying trans women should be playing in womenâs sports?
yes.
even after hormone therapy, there are some physical differences that don't fully go away. like, trans women who went through male puberty typically retain advantages in things like bone density, skeletal structure, wtc. there are studies that have shown that even after a year or two of testosterone suppression, there's still measurably higher muscle mass and strength compared to cis women athletes
this isn't about anyone's identity being invalid or anything like that, it's about the biomechanics of elite competition where tiny margins matter hugely. we all know that women's sports categories exist specifically because testosterone during development creates performance differences that training alone can't overcome. that same principle applies her3
"you're staring" "you're beautiful"
they are canon to me
(verga marico, soy yo o la gente al otro lado del mundo tiene mucho tiempo libre???) tumblr will never stop being funny to me. people write entire essays about their anons like it's a human rights issue when at the end of the day⌠it's a blue app where we hit reblog on stupid pics and silly text posts.
if anons make you miserable, that's valid, but there's a literal settings toggle for that. instead, we get multi-paragraph speeches, dramatic exits, and âI'm taking a breakâ cliffhangers like it's season finale television.
and then the same folks will slide into your dms because you didn't respond with 100% sympathy. like⌠bestie, tumblr is not that deep. it's not a brand, it's not your job, it's not tiktok influencer hour. it's a hobby blog.
maybe just⌠write your fic, post it, log off, touch grass.
this is a psa that my anons arenât there for you to abuse me through
my anons are there for you to talk to me about my fics without having to reveal yourself and be anxious. I leave my anons on because I know how it is when you want to talk to your fav writer but canât because youâre too anxious.
my anons arenât there for you to trauma dump your life stories because you think they relate to my fics when they donât. I have never once said my fics are realistic, itâs just a bit of fiction that I write in my spare time. i try to research about certain topics so I go based off of that, not everything will be up to your realistic standards.
i genuinely hate opening tumblr at the moment because all I seem to receive in my anons is abuse which i absolutely hate. Iâve taken multiple breaks yet each time come back to abuse.
I delete so many rude and unnecessary anons every single day and itâs getting too much. Itâs getting to the point that i no longer want to write or share my fics.
For now, Iâm taking another break and potentially turning my anons off.
Writers donât deserve your abuse or owe you shit!!
not to be mean, pero por quĂŠ coĂąo los escritores en tumblr se toman todo tan en serio?? wn, no tienes oficio o quĂŠ?? hablan como si fueran influencers de tiktok de mi ciudad con sus "I need to take a break"
shes so baby here
isn't it kinda weird how people ship two characters who barely had like a minute or two of screen time together in one episode and then never showed up together again? lol honestly, i'm more into calex than benovak or cabenson.
when I'm trying to solve a 'specially heinous crime but alex cabot and her lethal face card is solving me instead
RESERVATION FOR DISASTER. calex one-shot.
Summary: Alex and Casey have been trying (and failing) to have a proper date night for weeks. Between their insane caseloads, Olivia Bensonâs tendency to call them in at all hours, and their own competitive natures, every attempt has ended in chaos.
Tonight, Alex has finally made dinner reservations at an exclusive restaurant, and Casey has sworn she wonât let anything interfere. But, of course, things donât go as planned.
6:30 PM
Alex's apartment was a study in controlled chaos. Steam billowed from the bathroom, carrying the scent of her jasmine shampoo through the hallway as she meticulously applied her makeup. Every detail had been planned with the precision she usually reserved for closing arguments.
The reservation at Lumière hadn't just been made three weeks in advance â it had been strategically timed for a Wednesday evening when the restaurant was slightly less crowded, specifically requested to be in the quieter back section, and confirmed not twice but three times. The last confirmation had been accompanied by a subtle name-drop of a judge who owed her a favor, just to ensure everything would be perfect.
Her navy blue Guy Laroche dress hung on the closet door like a promise of elegance, and she'd even gone so far as to have it professionally pressed. This wasn't just dinner â this was a tactical operation, and Alexandra Cabot never lost a tactical operation.
At least, that's what she kept telling herself.
"You know," Casey's voice drifted in from the bedroom, accompanied by the sound of drawers opening and closing with increasing urgency, "some people just call their favorite restaurant and show up."
Alex applied her mascara with surgical precision. "Some people also think pleather is acceptable courtroom attire."
"That was one time," Casey protested. "And in my defense, I was first chair on the Matthews case and my dry cleaning hadn'tâ" A loud thud followed by muttered cursing interrupted her justification.
Alex closed her eyes, counted to three, and stepped into the bedroom. "What are you doing?"
Casey was on her knees, half-buried in their shared closet, one earring already in place and the other clutched between her teeth. Her red hair was falling out of its careful updo, and she'd somehow managed to put her dress on backwards. "I can't find my other shoe," she mumbled around the earring.
"The black Louboutins?"
"No, theâ"
"The navy pumps?"
"No, Iâ"
"Please tell me you're not looking for those horrific comfort sandals you tried to wear to the DA's dinner."
Casey emerged from the closet, hair thoroughly disheveled, to fix Alex with an indignant look. "Those sandals are orthopedically approved andâ"
"Are banned from any restaurant that requires a reservation," Alex finished, already moving to her side of the closet. She reached up to the top shelf, pulled down a dust bag, and extracted a pair of elegant silver heels. "Here. These will match your dress, assuming you put it on correctly at some point."
Casey glanced down at her backwards dress and grinned. "I was wondering why the neckline felt weird." She stood, pressing a quick kiss to Alex's cheek. "This is why I keep you around. Well, this and your exceptional cross-examination skills."
"Flattery will not excuse tardiness," Alex replied, but she was fighting a smile. "Now, about tonight..."
Casey groaned, flopping dramatically onto their bed. "Please tell me this isn't another detailed itinerary."
"This is a simple request for one normal, uninterrupted date night." Alex perched on the edge of the bed, careful not to wrinkle her dress. "Just one evening where we don't get called away for work, or run into opposing counsel, or end up discussing case law over appetizers."
"That last one is entirely your fault. You're the one who brought up Miranda during the soup course."
"The waiter misquoted it! I couldn't just let that stand."
Casey sat up, laughing. "Only you would fact-check a waiter's legal knowledge." She reached for her other earring, her expression turning suspicious. "Wait a minute. Is this why you promised me chocolate soufflĂŠ? Are you bribing me?"
"I prefer to think of it as incentivizing good behavior," Alex replied primly, smoothing a nonexistent wrinkle from her dress. "We are going to have one uninterrupted, romantic date night. Just one. No distractions, no emergencies, noâ"
The opening notes of "Bad Boys" â Casey's ringtone for work calls â filled the room.
Alex closed her eyes and exhaled slowly through her nose, wondering if it was possible to sue the universe for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
7:00 PM.
"You manifested that," Casey said, pointing at her with mock seriousness. Her silver dress â now properly oriented â caught the light as she moved, and Alex was momentarily distracted by how beautiful she looked, even with her hair still slightly askew.
"Answer it, Novak. But if it's workâ"
Casey held up a finger as she answered, her face shifting into what Alex privately called her "ADA mode." "Hey, Liv. What's up?"
Alex crossed her arms, deploying the look that had once made a mob enforcer cry on the witness stand. Casey, predictably, just winked at her.
"Uh-huh," Casey said into the phone, pacing their bedroom in her stocking feet, the borrowed silver heels still waiting by the bed. "Uh-huh. Liv, Iâ" She glanced at Alex, winced, then tried again. "Okay, I really can't right now, butâ"
Alex tapped her watch, which she'd specifically coordinated with her outfit. She'd learned early in their relationship that Casey operated on what she called "Novak Time," which was consistently twenty minutes behind the rest of the world.
Casey mouthed, One minute, while making the puppy dog eyes that had gotten her out of trouble more times than Alex cared to admit.
"That's a lie, and you know it," Alex muttered, walking to their dresser where she'd left a glass of wine for exactly this type of situation. She took a slow sip, glaring at Casey over the rim.
Casey, demonstrating the selective hearing that made her both an excellent prosecutor and an infuriating girlfriend, ignored her. "Look, just email me the details, and I'llâ" She stopped, sighed, then rolled her eyes toward the ceiling as if seeking divine intervention. "Fine. But you owe Alex a very expensive bottle of wine."
Alex arched an eyebrow, already mentally upgrading her wine requirements from "expensive" to "requires a separate insurance policy."
Casey hung up and turned to her with the smile that usually preceded either brilliant legal strategy or complete chaos. "Small favor. I swear, it won't interfere with dinner."
Alex took another long sip of wine, letting the silence speak for her.
"It's tiny," Casey insisted, finally stepping into the heels. "Microscopic. Barely worth mentioning. Liv just needs me to stop by the precinct for two minutes to sign something."
"The precinct," Alex repeated flatly, "which is in the opposite direction of the restaurant."
"Yes, butâ"
"During rush hour."
"Wellâ"
"On the night I specifically asked for no work interruptions."
Casey approached her with the careful steps of someone approaching a particularly irritated judge. "I will make it up to you," she promised, wrapping her arms around Alex's waist. "And I already have a plan."
"Does this plan involve being on time to our reservation?"
"It involves calling a cab right now, stopping at the precinct for exactly two minutes, and then taking the shortcut I know through Little Italy to get to the restaurant." She pressed a kiss to Alex's neck, right below her ear. "Trust me?"
Alex sighed, melting slightly despite her best efforts to maintain her annoyance. "The last time you said that, we ended up in contempt of court."
"That was one time! And the judge totally deserved it."
"He did," Alex admitted, then pulled back to fix Casey with a stern look. "Two minutes. Not a second more."
Casey's grin was bright enough to power Manhattan. "Scout's honor."
"You were never a scout."
"Details, details. Now come on, our chariot awaits!"
7:45 PM.
Their yellow cab crawled through Manhattan traffic like a particularly unmotivated snail. Alex watched the minutes tick by on her watch, calculating and recalculating their estimated arrival time with increasing despair. The leather seats squeaked every time she shifted, which was often, because Casey couldn't sit still to save her life.
By some miracle (and possibly several traffic laws bent beyond recognition), they were only fifteen minutes behind schedule. Alex, channeling the optimism she usually reserved for particularly difficult jury selections, decided to consider it a win.
That feeling of tentative victory lasted exactly three blocks.
"Hold up a second," their driver said, his eyes meeting Alex's in the rearview mirror. The cab swerved slightly as he turned to get a better look, causing Casey to grab Alex's arm. "I know you! You're that prosecutor, right? The one from that huge mob case!"
Alex stiffened, her spine straightening automatically into what Casey called her "courtroom posture." "I don't discuss work outside of the office."
"That was you!" He grinned, completely missing â or choosing to ignore â her arctic tone. "Man, that trial was something else. What was that guy's name? Sal... Sal something-or-other?"
Casey, because she had apparently made it her life's mission to be both the love of Alex's life and her personal tormentor, leaned forward with an eager grin. "Salvatore Giordano."
Alex turned to her with a look that had once made a defense attorney switch careers to accounting.
The cabbie snapped his fingers, the car drifting dangerously close to a parked SUV. "Yeah, that's him! You absolutely destroyed that guy! I watched every single day of that trial on Court TV. Even called out sick from work for the closing arguments."
Casey chuckled, clearly warming to her role as Alex's personal antagonist. "Oh, she destroys people for a living. It's her favorite hobby. Well, that and organizing her legal briefs by color-coding and subspecies."
"They're organized by jurisdiction and precedential value," Alex muttered, then immediately regretted engaging.
The cabbie laughed, taking another corner so sharply that Casey slid into Alex's side. "So, how dangerous was that whole thing? Did you get threats? Witness tampering? I heard the mob tried to bug your office!"
Alex pinched the bridge of her nose, wondering if it was possible to get motion sickness from emotional whiplash.
"Funny you should ask," Casey said, her voice dropping into what Alex recognized as her storytelling tone. She used the same voice to charm juries and convince judges to grant continuances. "There was this one timeâ"
"Novak."
"What? I'm just making conversation. Besides, the statute of limitations has definitely expired onâ"
Alex fixed her with the look that had once convinced the entire Manhattan DA's office to switch from Starbucks to her preferred coffee shop. "Casey."
Casey grinned but held up her hands in surrender, her silver bracelet catching the streetlights. "Fine, fine. No war stories. Though I still think the one about the wire in the cannoli is hilarious."
The cabbie, undeterred by their exchange, launched into his own thoroughly unnecessary analysis of the trial. "The way you handled that cross-examination of the restaurant owner? Brilliant! And when you got that witness to crack on the standâ"
"Take the next left," Alex interrupted, her voice clipped. "It's faster."
"But the GPS saysâ"
"The GPS doesn't have to preside over motion hearings tomorrow morning."
Casey bit her lip, clearly trying not to laugh. "She knows every shortcut in Manhattan," she stage-whispered to the driver. "It's because she's pathologically early to everything."
"It's called being professional," Alex corrected, then checked her watch again. "And we're now twenty minutes behind schedule."
"See what I mean?" Casey said to the driver. "Pathological."
The cabbie nodded sagely. "My wife's the same way. Speaking of wives, are you twoâ"
"Left turn," Alex said sharply. "Now."
As the cab finally turned, Alex stared out the window, mentally reviewing New York's justifiable homicide statutes. She was fairly certain she could convince a jury that both Casey and the cabbie had it coming. After all, she had an excellent track record with difficult cases.
Casey, reading her mind as she often did, leaned over to whisper, "You know you love me."
"That remains to be seen," Alex replied, but she couldn't quite hide her smile when Casey kissed her cheek.
The cabbie, watching in the rearview mirror, beamed. "You two remind me of me and the missus. Hey, did I ever tell you about how we met? It's actually a funny storyâ"
Alex closed her eyes and began silently reciting the Model Penal Code. She'd gotten through three sections when Casey's hand found hers, squeezing gently.
"Almost there," Casey murmured. "And I promise, the soufflĂŠ will be worth it."
8:10 PM.
They finally made it to Lumière, only slightly disheveled and moderately behind schedule. The restaurant's elegant facade gleamed with warm lighting, promising an evening of sophistication that Alex desperately hoped they might still salvage. The maĂŽtre d' recognized her name immediately â perhaps that third confirmation call hadn't been entirely paranoid â and led them to a perfectly positioned corner table.
Alex relaxed incrementally as they settled in, taking in the ambient lighting, the soft jazz playing in the background, and the way Casey's eyes lit up at the wine list. Maybe, just maybe, the universe would grant them this one evening.
Their waiter had just finished pouring their wine â a particularly good vintage that Alex had been saving for a special occasion â when she saw him. Samuel Jeffries, their newest junior ADA, was weaving through the tables toward them with the panicked expression of someone about to confess to a capital crime.
"Oh, come on," Alex muttered into her wine glass.
Casey followed her gaze and winced. "Maybe he's just here for dinner?"
"With that look on his face? He's either committed a felony or lost crucial evidence. Possibly both."
Jeffries reached their table, his tie askew and his normally neat hair looking like he'd been running his hands through it repeatedly. "Casey! Alex! I am so sorry to interrupt, but IâI accidentally sent the wrong case file to the DA's office andâ"
Alex pinched the bridge of her nose, wondering if it was too late to transfer to the civil division. Or maybe Montana.
Casey, demonstrating the unflappable calm that made her so effective with victims, reached for a breadstick. "Which case?"
Jeffries shifted his weight from foot to foot, looking like he might actually faint. "Uh... Harrison v. State?"
Alex's groan was almost drowned out by Casey choking on her breadstick.
"That's a high-profile appeal," Alex said, her voice carrying the same deadly calm she used right before destroying a witness on cross. "What exactly did you do?"
"I might have..." Jeffries tugged at his collar. "I might have sent the defense our internal notes instead of the motions brief."
Casey's coughing fit got worse. Alex actually dropped her fork, the clatter drawing looks from nearby tables.
"Oh my God," Casey said when she could breathe again, her face flushed from coughing and suppressed laughter. "That is so much worse than I expected. Like, monumentally worse. Like, 'start updating your resume' worse."
"Please tell me you recalled the email," Alex said, her voice carrying the kind of calm that usually preceded hurricanes.
Jeffries gave her a look of pure terror. "I tried. But they... they already opened it."
Casey took a large sip of wine, then immediately reached for the bottle to pour more. "Yeah, no. You're dead. It was nice knowing you. I'll send flowers to your funeral."
Jeffries looked between them, his face cycling through various stages of panic. "What do I do? Should I call the defense? Maybe if I explainâ"
"No," Alex and Casey said in unison.
"Sit down," Alex commanded, pointing to an empty chair. "Do not speak to anyone. Do not call anyone. Do not even think about calling anyone." She pulled out her phone, already scrolling through her contacts. "I'll fix it. But you owe me a favor, and I will collect."
Casey shook her head, torn between amusement and sympathy. "It's honestly impressive how quickly this night has derailed. I think this might be a new record."
Alex shot her a withering look while pressing her phone to her ear. "Judge Harrison? Yes, I know it's after hours. I apologize for interrupting your evening, but we have a situation that requires immediate attention..."
9:00 PM.
Alex had just managed to salvage the evening through a combination of legal maneuvering, three very apologetic phone calls, and what might have technically qualified as blackmail in some jurisdictions. Jeffries had been dispatched with strict instructions to go directly home and touch absolutely nothing work-related until Monday. The wine had been replenished, their entrees had finally arrived, and Casey had solemnly sworn on her bar license to behave.
The universe, apparently, took this as a personal challenge.
The fire alarm's shriek cut through the restaurant's carefully cultivated atmosphere like a defendant's outburst in a quiet courtroom. The elegant dining room froze for a moment, then erupted into confused murmuring as the sprinkler system began to whir ominously overhead.
They both looked up at the flashing lights, then at each other.
"You have got to be kidding me," Alex muttered, her perfectly cooked steak going untouched. "This isn't happening."
Casey set down her wine glass with exaggerated care. "Well, look on the bright side."
"There is no bright side."
"At least it wasn't my fault this time."
Alex's retort was cut off by the maĂŽtre d's smooth voice announcing that everyone needed to evacuate immediately. The restaurant staff moved through the tables with practiced efficiency, helping diners gather their belongings and herding them toward the exits.
"Should we grab the wine?" Casey asked, eyeing their half-full bottle. "It seems shame to waste it."
"That would be theft," Alex pointed out, even as she cast a longing look at the vintage she'd specially requested.
"I prefer to think of it as evidence preservation."
Despite herself, Alex laughed. It was either that or cry at this point. "Come on, counselor. Before we add 'arrested for grand larceny' to this evening's highlights."
They joined the stream of displaced diners flowing onto the sidewalk, the cool evening air raising goosebumps on their arms. Casey immediately shed her heels, holding them by their straps as she stood barefoot on the concrete.
"That cannot be sanitary," Alex said, watching her with fond exasperation.
"Neither is third-degree burns from these torture devices you call shoes." Casey wiggled her toes. "Besides, we've got bigger problems. I'm starving."
As if on cue, several fire trucks rounded the corner, sirens wailing. Their red lights painted the gathering crowd in surreal flashes of color, turning evening gowns and suit jackets into a bizarre light show.
"I don't suppose they'll let us back in anytime soon," Casey mused, watching as firefighters deployed from their trucks with practiced efficiency.
Alex sighed, already pulling out her phone. "I'm ordering pizza."
"I love you," Casey said with such genuine affection that Alex felt her frustration start to melt. "Even if you did curse this entire evening by tempting fate."
"I did not tempt fate. I made dinner reservations."
"You specifically said, and I quote, 'no distractions, no emergencies.' That's basically daring the universe to mess with us."
"The universe is not a spiteful entity thatâ" Alex stopped as smoke began visibly curling from one of the restaurant's upper windows. "You know what? Never mind. I rescind my objection."
Casey grinned, wrapping an arm around her waist. "Wise decision, counselor. Now, about that pizza..."
10:30 PM.
Their apartment felt like a sanctuary after the chaos of the evening. They'd changed into comfortable clothes â Alex in silk pajamas that probably cost more than some suits, Casey in worn Harvard Law sweats that had seen better decades. The coffee table was covered in an impressive spread: one large pizza (half margherita for Alex, half "everything but anchovies" for Casey), garlic knots that would guarantee they both had terrible breath tomorrow, and a bottle of wine they'd rescued from Alex's impressive home collection.
"All I'm saying," Casey argued, gesturing with a slice of pizza in a way that made Alex nervously eye her white couch, "is that the Fourth Amendment issues in People v. Reddington were so obvious that a first-year law student could have spotted them."
"No, they weren't," Alex countered, reaching over to steal a bite of Casey's slice before it could become a projectile. "The expectation of privacy in shared cloud storage is still evolving case law."
Casey gasped with theatrical outrage. "You pizza thief! And don't try to distract me with technological semantics. The warrant was clearly overbroad."
"The warrant was perfectly reasonable given the circumstances." Alex settled more comfortably into the couch, tucking her feet under Casey's thigh. "The scope was limited to the specific folder structure identified by the witness."
"Oh please, they accessed his entire drive history!"
"Which was necessary to establish pattern and practice."
Casey narrowed her eyes, reaching for another slice. "You're just arguing with me because you can."
"I'm arguing with you because you're wrong," Alex corrected primly, but she couldn't hide her smile. "And because you're cute when you're outraged about constitutional issues."
"Flattery will not win you this argument." Casey paused, considering. "Though it might win you another piece of pizza."
They settled into a comfortable silence, broken only by the soft music playing from Alex's carefully curated playlist and the distant sounds of the city below. The chaos of the evening felt far away now, replaced by something warmer and more genuine than any fancy restaurant could have provided.
Casey squinted at her, a thoughtful expression crossing her face. "Admit it â this is better than some overpriced steak at Lumière."
Alex paused, taking in the scene: Casey's disheveled hair and bright eyes, the way her old sweatshirt had a small sauce stain already (because some things never changed), the comfortable weight of her feet under Alex's legs, the simple pleasure of arguing case law over pizza.
She rolled her eyes but couldn't suppress her smile. "Fine. But don't expect me to say it out loud."
Casey's answering grin was brighter than all the candles at Lumière combined. "Oh, I know you love this. You love me. You probably even love that I derailed your perfectly planned evening."
"That's a stretch."
"Is it, though?"
Alex sighed, shook her head fondly, and leaned in to kiss her. Casey tasted like garlic and wine and happiness, and Alex couldn't imagine wanting to be anywhere else.
Even the universe, it seemed, sometimes knew exactly what they needed.
"We're still going back to Lumière though," Alex murmured against Casey's lips. "I refuse to let that reservation deposit go to waste."
Casey laughed. "Whatever you say, counselor. But maybe next time we shouldn't tempt fate by announcing our plans."
"Next time," Alex said, pulling back to fix Casey with her best courtroom stare, "we're ordering in."
"Objection noted and sustained," Casey agreed, pulling her back in for another kiss.
The pizza got cold, the wine ran out, and somewhere in Manhattan, Jeffries was probably still having a panic attack about the Harrison case. But here, in their apartment with their terrible takeout and their endless legal arguments, everything was exactly as it should be.
Even if Alex would never admit it out loud.
Rewatching Alexâs and Caseyâs SVU seasons make me feral. So⌠here comes a long winded worm vomit about them.
Alexâs first episode where she calls Uncle Bill and her politics talk with Cragen clearly establishes her as an ambitious privileged ADA.
Casey, right from the start, coming from a different bureau and only vouched for by Branch, clearly establishes her as an underdog.
Alex wears suits in muted colors.
Casey wears bright as fuck random outfits (her long skirts with thigh high boots makes me shake my head and feel feral at the same time).
Alex feels like she just comes and goes and crushes it at trials.
Casey quite literally inserts herself even during investigations.
The way judges keep berating Alex and call her âAlexandraâ like a petulant child makes it feel like these judges have weekend lunches with the Cabots, headed by Uncle Bill.
Caseyâs poker game interruption and sheepishness (and subsequent cringey dream admittance) makes it feel like she really was just a random lawyer to these people.
Alex may seethe at times but she always remains restrained.
Casey, on the other hand, fights just about everyone. The detectives, people at the DAâs office, the judges, and heck even the military.
Alex loses, too, but sometimes, she doesnât mind doing so as long as she can move forward the case law.
Casey loses, too, but she always minds. Always.
Alex depends on Olivia a lot.
Casey depends on Elliot a lot.
Huang has both their hearts.
These two are so different and yet so alike. They are both intensely passionate and yet so many things about their attitude and actions make them different.
I love them so so much.
Also, these similarities and differences just make them all the more fated to be with each other.
CaLex, you will always have my heart.
olivia is better than me I would've been on my knees for alex cabot every time she comes back to my life